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Ripples Lyrics

Bluegirls come in every size
Some are wise and some otherwise,
They got pretty blue eyes.
For an hour a man may change
For an hour her face looks strange -
Looks strange, looks strange.

Marching to the promised land
Where the honey flows and takes you by the hand,
Pulls you down on your knees,
While you're down a pool appears.
The face in the water looks up,
And she shakes her head as if to say
That it's the last time you'll look like today.

Sail away, away
Ripples never come back.
Gone to the other side.
Sail away, away.

The face that launched a thousand ships
Is sinking fast, that happens you know,
The water gets below.
Seems not very long ago
Lovelier she was than any that I know.

Angels never know it's time
To close the book and gracefully decline,
The song has found a tale.
My, what a jealous pool is she.
The face in the water looks up
She shakes her head as if to say
That the bluegirls have all gone away.

Sail away, away
Ripples never come back.
They've gone to the other side.
Look into the pool,
Ripples never come back,
Dive to the bottom and go to the top
To see where they have gone
Oh, they've gone to the other side...

Sail away, away
Ripples never come back.
Gone to the other side.
Look into the pool,
The ripples never come back, come back,
Dive to the bottom and go to the top
To see where they have gone
They've gone to the other side
Ripples never come back
Sail away, away...
30 Meanings

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Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

I believe that BlueGirls are derived from a poem by John Crowe Ransom ... and refers to adolescent school girls for whom beauty is the focus of their lives

(snip)"In this poem, Ransom offers the girls three main lessons, which, although they seem contradictory, are really closely related:

(1) Beauty does fade.
(2) Use your beauty as much as you can before it fades.
(3) Have something in your life besides beauty, so that when it fades, you are not left with nothing.

He describes beauty as delicate and rare, unable to be established. He focuses on the lightheartedness of young girls, how they are caught up in beauty, and he warns them to be conscientious of the fact that their beauty will fade and that they cannot put all their hope on their beauty. At the same time, he encourages them to "practice" their beauty until it is gone, and he promises to celebrate that beauty as best he can, with all its value and frailty."(snip)

from http://titan.iwu.edu/~wchapman/americanpoetryweb/ranbluan.html

IMHO, 'Ripples' is absolutely the finest musical creation ever produced by Genesis. The imagery and message of the lyrics are also piercing, if not altogether an original concept.

@meloniec Ripples makes us feel free to be as we were intended....

@meloniec Without question, Ripples is directly inspired by John Crowe Ransom's poem "Blue Girls." Ransom writes, "it is not long since she was lovelier than any of you." Tony Banks writes, "seems not very long ago, lovelier she was than any that I know." Banks starts his lyrics with the words "Blue girls", the title of the Ransom poem. The "promised land where the honey flows" may mean life's ease to a girl when she is young. I think the opening verse of the song is from the point of view of a rock musician's encounters with young groupies, which...

@meloniec I see that you posted this some time ago. My hope is that you still view this account so I could properly thank you. I have loved this song for 40 odd years and did not make the connection to the poem. Thank you!!

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

Indeed, this is a great song. It is also one of the less known Genesis songs because it was from the late 70's, and it preceded the slew of mainstream songs they would produce later. A lot of the songs from this timeframe were written by Tony Banks and are AMAZING.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

I don't think this song is about relationships at all - it's just about growing old and losing one's looks. It is perfectly illustrated on the album cover for "Trick of the Tail" with an old hag looking into a pool of water and seeing her young, beautiful face looking back.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

Graham - those holes were there to prevent the records as being sold as new, they did that to albums given away to DJs, etc.

And I think Voodoo is spot on, the only thing that I would add is the historical reference to the "face that launched a thousand ships", Helen of Troy, with the "sail away" being those sailors who used to come visit (or fight wars for her) were all leaving, creating ripples as they left, never to return.

@princetonplayer brilliant, yes.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

Not difficult to figure out, ripples never come back means we cannot get our youth back, and the attractiveness of youth is fleeting and should not be taken for granted. The reflection in the water is our self awareness, and also can be a memory of what we used to be like or how we looked years ago.

My Interpretation
Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

I believe this song is a lamentation for women who trade solely on their looks. (A blue girl may even be a reference to a prostitute.) Eventually, we all must endure the process of aging, but for a supermodel or trophy wife, for example, the realization of fading beauty may be especially distressing.

The ripples are the waves of time created by the falling tearsdrops of a woman lamenting the loss of her youthful beauty. Each ripple sadly carrying away a relection of the face as it is succeeded by the next ripple, and the next, as time and tide pass on.

This is a beautiful composition from one of the most underated productions in contemporary music history. In my opinion, Trick of the Tail was Genesis' magnus opus and one of the all time best albums within the genre of progressive rock.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

@MMM88 - I agree, this is in the top 3 songs on the album.

@Voodoo Tattoo - I don't believe Genesis were into referencing prostitution, but overall I think you're spot-on. Each ripple is another day/week/year of a life passed, and each look into the pool (e.g. mirror) relects back to a person the fact of their mortality. BTW, thank you for noting the beauty of the orchestration - I think that those of us (including you, the person right now) reading this page are honestly among a relatively small breed who truly appreciate sophisticated musical beauty.

Ironically, the one thing I take away from this song, being on this album, is that while Genesis would have a number of excellent songs to come afterward, in a sense each album hereafter was a ripple for them, slightly less beautiful then the one before.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

Magnificent!! This is my favorite Genesis song. I bought "A Trick of the Tail" just for Ripples. It turned out to be a masterpiece album--still one of my favorites. I love the analogy of ripples of water with time and how you can never get back what has already flowed by. A refreshing change of theme from traditional love songs.

Memory
Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis

8 Mins. of Beauty. Reminds me of my Best Friend, Robin.

Cover art for Ripples lyrics by Genesis
 
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